Rethinking Your Bathroom: How to Remove Microplastics From Your Routine
This article contains affiliate links. If you buy through these links, ErasePlastic may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.
Your morning routine is supposed to set you up for the day - but if your bathroom shelves are lined with plastic bottles, synthetic sponges, and conventional personal care products, you may be starting each day with a dose of microplastics before you've even had breakfast. Plastic free bathroom products are one of the most impactful switches you can make, because the bathroom is a room where plastic meets heat, water, and skin simultaneously - the exact conditions that accelerate plastic chemical release.
The good news is that the bathroom is also one of the easiest rooms to transition. Most of the plastic in there is packaging, and almost every product now has a low-waste equivalent. This guide walks you through each area of your bathroom routine - washing, dental care, shaving, skincare - and shows you exactly what to swap and why it matters.
Why the Bathroom Is a Microplastic Problem Worth Solving
We absorb things through our skin. It's a straightforward biological fact, and it means the products you apply in the shower and at the sink aren't just sitting on the surface. Conventional personal care products frequently contain microbeads (now banned in many countries for rinse-off products, but still present in some leave-on items), synthetic fragrances derived from petrochemicals, and preservatives like parabens - all packaged in single-use plastic that adds to environmental microplastic load when it breaks down.
Beyond ingredients, there's the packaging itself. The average person uses around 11 personal care products a day, most in plastic bottles. That plastic eventually fragments into microplastics in the environment. Switching to plastic free bathroom products - bars, refillables, glass containers, and natural materials - reduces both routes of exposure at once.
Hair and Body Washing: The Shampoo Bar Swap
Shampoo and conditioner are typically among the most plastic-heavy items in the bathroom - both in packaging and sometimes in ingredients. Many conventional shampoos contain silicones (synthetic polymers that coat the hair shaft) and are packaged in bottles that are difficult to recycle due to pump mechanisms and mixed plastics.
Shampoo bars eliminate the packaging problem entirely and are typically formulated without silicones or sulphates. A good shampoo bar lasts two to three times as long as an equivalent liquid bottle, and conditioner bars work the same way. There's a short adjustment period for some hair types as natural oils rebalance - usually one to two weeks - but most people find the switch genuinely worthwhile. For body wash, a natural soap bar in a simple paper wrapper replaces an entire plastic bottle with something biodegradable and long-lasting.
Dental Care: Beyond the Plastic Toothbrush
Around one billion plastic toothbrushes are discarded every year in the United States alone. They're made from a mix of nylon bristles and polypropylene handles - neither of which biodegrades. Every toothbrush you've ever used still exists somewhere in the environment. Bamboo toothbrushes replace the plastic handle with a fast-growing, compostable material while maintaining the same cleaning effectiveness.
Toothpaste is the other half of the dental plastic problem. Standard tubes are made from laminated plastic that can't be recycled in most household waste streams. Toothpaste tablets in glass jars are a practical alternative - you simply chew one, wet your brush, and clean as normal. They travel well, produce no waste, and many are fluoride-free or fluoride-containing depending on your preference. For flossing, conventional nylon floss in a plastic dispenser can be replaced with silk dental floss in a refillable glass jar.
Shaving and Skincare: Where Plastic Hides
Disposable plastic razors are a significant source of single-use plastic waste - billions are thrown away each year. A stainless steel safety razor costs more upfront but the replaceable blades are a fraction of the ongoing cost of cartridge razors, and the handle itself lasts indefinitely. The learning curve is about two weeks; once you have the angle right, it's a genuinely superior shave.
For skincare, reduce microplastic exposure by choosing products in glass, aluminium, or cardboard packaging wherever possible. Look for formulas free from microbeads, PEG compounds, and synthetic film-formers (often listed as acrylates copolymer or carbomer). A glass soap dispenser on your sink replaces the endless cycle of plastic hand soap bottles with a single refillable vessel you can fill from a large concentrate.
The Bathroom Itself: Towels, Curtains, and Accessories
Synthetic bathroom textiles - polyester towels, plastic shower curtain liners - shed microfibers every time they're washed or disturbed. Conventional towels are often made from a cotton-polyester blend that feels soft but releases synthetic fibres into your water supply and the air in your bathroom.
Organic cotton towels are denser, more absorbent, and contain no synthetic microfibers. They get softer with washing rather than pilling and shedding. For shower curtains, a fabric liner in GOTS-certified organic cotton or a glass screen are both plastic-free alternatives to the standard PVC liner that off-gasses chemicals and breaks down into microplastics over time.
Plastic-Free Bathroom Swaps We Recommend
These are the products that cover the highest-impact areas of a typical bathroom routine. Start with whichever swap feels most relevant to your current setup.
The Bottom Line
The bathroom is one of the quickest rooms to transform because so much of its plastic is packaging rather than products themselves. Swapping to bars, glass, and natural materials doesn't require changing your routine - just what you use to carry it out. Start with the items you replace most frequently: toothbrushes, shampoo, soap. Each swap compounds over time, and a fully plastic free bathroom routine is genuinely achievable without sacrificing performance or convenience. Your skin, and the waterways downstream, will be better for it.